Hi, my name is Dustin, and im a bow-aholic. wow im not crazy after all. I, like many others, have a background in woodworking. i figured i would make a bow, took a few quick instruction websites at face value, bought some poplar took my time only to have it blow up in my face (literally). but your right about learning, the most elementary mistakes are the ones you have already made. (and this continues) i only have about 8 3/4 bows under my belt, first 2 blew, next 3 worked two of them pretty well, 6th one was static recurve 57inches long, learned a lot with that one, lifted large pieces off the back from over stressing and having too high brace, 7 and 8 were kids bows with serious grain violations, learned how forgiving backing is. i am currently working on a (hopefully) 90lb-ish hickory flatbow w/ very wide limbs 2.25" to the fades. and a gemsbok selfbow that i could find almost no information on building until i someone here piped up on a post i made asking for help. the problem with bow building is the more you do it, the more you want to do it, and for me at least, the more relaxing it is doing it.
to any new bowyer out there. dont expect a great looking great shooting bow on your first try, it is possible but not likely. ive only been making bows for 9 months, and im already on bow 9 and 10 (all but the gemsbok board bows) and im going to tackle my first stave next, from what i have researched its a completely different animal. DONT BE AFRAID TO ASK QUESTIONS, ill bet any one of us had the same question at some time or maybe still do.